以后大家都死后都不是火葬了。化学溶解后直接冲入下水道。Smith Falls的一家殡仪馆已近开始实施。

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'I think this is the way of the future, this green technology.'- Dale Hilton, owner of Aquagreen Dispositions

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/bodies-dissolved-sewers-smiths-falls-funeral-1.3635063
Smiths Falls, Ont., funeral business dissolves the dead, pours them into town sewers
'You come in by water, and you leave by water,' says business owner
By Stu Mills, CBC News Posted: Jun 20, 2016 5:00 AM ET Last Updated: Jun 20, 2016 9:26 AM ET

dale-hilton-aquagreen-dispositions-green-funeral-smiths-falls.jpg

Dale Hilton, a proponent of so-called green funerals, shows the pressurized vessel his Smiths Falls, Ont., business uses to break down human remains. The liquid waste is then disposed into the town's sewer system, while powdered remains are returned to the loved one's family. (Stu Mills/CBC)

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Waterworks officials in a small town southwest of Ottawa are monitoring a funeral company that has become the first in Ontario to use an alkaline solution to dissolve human remains, and then drain the leftover coffee-coloured effluents into the sewer system.

Aquagreen Dispositions began operating in a rental unit within the former Rideau Regional Centre in Smiths Falls in May 2015 after receiving a licence from the Ontario government. Hilton's Unforgettable Tails, a parallel business handling the remains of pets, had been using the same process for a couple of years prior to Aquagreen Dispositions, but it took longer to get a licence to handle human remains.

The owner, Dale Hilton, who is from a family of funeral home operators in Smiths Falls, said he watched as the "green wave" swept through the funeral industry, bringing biodegradable caskets and urns.

Hilton said he started the alkaline hydrolysis business in the newly named Galipeau Centre as an alternative to the traditional, energy-using flame-based cremation process.

"It brings your body back to its natural state," Hilton said. "It's the same way as being buried in the ground, but instead of taking 15, 20 years to disintegrate, it does it in a quicker process. And it's all environmentally friendly."

Environmentally friendly 'cremation'
So-called green cremations made their way into Canada from the U.S. several years ago, crossing the border into Saskatchewan, and were also recently approved in Quebec.

Proponents of the process say traditional cremations typically take between three and four hours to complete and release about 250 kilograms of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.

Hilton's system uses potash, salt and water to break down a human body in a heated, pressurized vessel resembling an MRI machine.

surgical-hardware.jpg

Artificial joints and other surgical hardware aquired over a person's lifetime aren't damaged by the alkaline hydrolysis. They're sent away to be reused in developing countries. (Stu Mills/CBC)

After most of the body's organic material is dissolved in the alkaline solution, the dark-coloured, caustic fluid goes through two filter systems at Aquagreen Dispositions before it's sent into the Smiths Falls sewage treatment system.

'Nothing to be concerned about'
Before Aquagreen Dispositions opened, Ted Joynt, the superintendent of facilities for Smiths Falls and the municipal employee responsible for water treatment, inspected the business.

"We keep an eye on these things," said Joynt, whose staff samples the water discharged by the users of the Galipeau Centre campus weekly at the point where it enters the town's sewer system.

Joynt said staff measured two spikes in the output readings from the Galipeau Centre over the last year, but those measurements were within the range acceptable for other commercial water users, and — in any case — the abnormalities couldn't be definitively traced back to Aquagreen Dispositions.

"We consistently monitor for about the last year. [It's] nothing to be concerned about, nothing more than what happens at other industries," said Joynt, adding that the town would increase the frequency of sampling if there were concerns about abnormally poor discharge.

ted-joynt-smiths-falls-superindendent-utilities.jpg

Ted Joynt, the superintendent of utilities for Smiths Falls, says the town is closely monitoring sewage output from the company. (Stu Mills/CBC)

Joynt acknowledged the processing of a large number of bodies could be challenging for the water treatment plant.

"It could be a problem. We haven't experienced that yet. I don't know how many bodies they'd have to do in a day for that to be a problem," he said.

"The liquid mixes with all the other wastewater from the Galipeau Centre, so it tends to dilute it down quite a bit before it gets into our pipes."

Remaining bones dried, pressed into powder
The computerized Aquagreen Dispositions system takes less than two hours to dissolve most organic material.

Once the cycle is complete, the caustic fluid from the pressure vessel passes through two filters and on into the municipal sewer system, leaving only the skeleton behind.

Those bones, soft and wet from the alkaline hydrolysis process, are then dried in a convection oven, pressed into a fine white powder and finally returned to the loved one's family to be scattered.

The total weight of the powdered calcium phosphate matter that is returned, Hilton said, is between three and five kilograms.

"It's 100 per cent green," said Hilton, who has completed nearly 200 flame-free cremations since opening last year, with business growing each month.

'I think this is the way of the future, this green technology.'- Dale Hilton, owner of Aquagreen Dispositions
"I think this is the way of the future, this green technology," he said.

"Flame-based [cremation] is not environmentally friendly, but up until this point, that's the only thing we've had. Now, I think people are looking at it a different way."

About 280 litres of alkaline water solution are needed to dissolve an average-sized human body. The heated, pressurized vessel requires an amount of electricity equivalent to that used by a refrigerator, Hilton said.

Artificial hip joints, surgical plates, screws, heart stents and other pieces of surgical hardware inserted in the body over a person's lifetime are unharmed by the process. Hilton said there's a program to recycle that specialized medical hardware, donating it to hospitals in developing countries where costs are prohibitively high.

"You're entering yourself back to your natural state as you come into this world. You come in by water, and you leave by water," said Hilton. "It's green, all the way around."
 
这就是尘归尘土归土吧,虽然觉得有些不忍,但其实想想这是最好的办法,否则以后到处是坟地,很浪费土地资源。

维村海边风景特好的一个长海湾,居然全是坟地,真心觉得浪费了。
 
这就是尘归尘土归土吧,虽然觉得有些不忍,但其实想想这是最好的办法,否则以后到处是坟地,很浪费土地资源。

维村海边风景特好的一个长海湾,居然全是坟地,真心觉得浪费了。
加拿大居然还怕浪费土地资源?
我觉得大片的土地没有开发利用啊!
 
加拿大居然还怕浪费土地资源?
我觉得大片的土地没有开发利用啊!

我没有只想加拿大,就是想想目前地球几十亿人,人人死了占两平方米的地儿,几代人后想象一下有多少个坟墓在地球上,想着都发麻。
 
咱投资开发个坟地往国内卖?
国内啊? 都讲究落叶归根, 还有很多中国移民死了宁愿送回中国安葬。
有哪个中国人疯了要把遗体安葬到加拿大来?
 
国内啊? 都讲究落叶归根, 还有很多中国移民死了宁愿送回中国安葬。
有哪个中国人疯了要把遗体安葬到加拿大来?
移民啊,下辈子easy mode啊

要走这个路线做marketing
 
我没有只想加拿大,就是想想目前地球几十亿人,人人死了占两平方米的地儿,几代人后想象一下有多少个坟墓在地球上,想着都发麻。
就是给下几代人的一个寄托罢了。
中国几千年来死了那么多人, 几千年的土葬了, 也没见占了多少地。
祖坟这东西, 都是平安年代的事情, 到了战乱一来, 时局动荡一下, 什么祖坟都给你平了, 重新起高楼,盖大宾馆。
 
好办法。
会不会被杀人犯利用毁尸灭迹呀?
 
'I think this is the way of the future, this green technology.'- Dale Hilton, owner of Aquagreen Dispositions

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/bodies-dissolved-sewers-smiths-falls-funeral-1.3635063
Smiths Falls, Ont., funeral business dissolves the dead, pours them into town sewers
'You come in by water, and you leave by water,' says business owner
By Stu Mills, CBC News Posted: Jun 20, 2016 5:00 AM ET Last Updated: Jun 20, 2016 9:26 AM ET

dale-hilton-aquagreen-dispositions-green-funeral-smiths-falls.jpg

Dale Hilton, a proponent of so-called green funerals, shows the pressurized vessel his Smiths Falls, Ont., business uses to break down human remains. The liquid waste is then disposed into the town's sewer system, while powdered remains are returned to the loved one's family. (Stu Mills/CBC)

7 shares
facebook-up.png

Email
Related Stories
Waterworks officials in a small town southwest of Ottawa are monitoring a funeral company that has become the first in Ontario to use an alkaline solution to dissolve human remains, and then drain the leftover coffee-coloured effluents into the sewer system.

Aquagreen Dispositions began operating in a rental unit within the former Rideau Regional Centre in Smiths Falls in May 2015 after receiving a licence from the Ontario government. Hilton's Unforgettable Tails, a parallel business handling the remains of pets, had been using the same process for a couple of years prior to Aquagreen Dispositions, but it took longer to get a licence to handle human remains.

The owner, Dale Hilton, who is from a family of funeral home operators in Smiths Falls, said he watched as the "green wave" swept through the funeral industry, bringing biodegradable caskets and urns.

Hilton said he started the alkaline hydrolysis business in the newly named Galipeau Centre as an alternative to the traditional, energy-using flame-based cremation process.

"It brings your body back to its natural state," Hilton said. "It's the same way as being buried in the ground, but instead of taking 15, 20 years to disintegrate, it does it in a quicker process. And it's all environmentally friendly."

Environmentally friendly 'cremation'
So-called green cremations made their way into Canada from the U.S. several years ago, crossing the border into Saskatchewan, and were also recently approved in Quebec.

Proponents of the process say traditional cremations typically take between three and four hours to complete and release about 250 kilograms of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.

Hilton's system uses potash, salt and water to break down a human body in a heated, pressurized vessel resembling an MRI machine.

surgical-hardware.jpg

Artificial joints and other surgical hardware aquired over a person's lifetime aren't damaged by the alkaline hydrolysis. They're sent away to be reused in developing countries. (Stu Mills/CBC)

After most of the body's organic material is dissolved in the alkaline solution, the dark-coloured, caustic fluid goes through two filter systems at Aquagreen Dispositions before it's sent into the Smiths Falls sewage treatment system.

'Nothing to be concerned about'
Before Aquagreen Dispositions opened, Ted Joynt, the superintendent of facilities for Smiths Falls and the municipal employee responsible for water treatment, inspected the business.

"We keep an eye on these things," said Joynt, whose staff samples the water discharged by the users of the Galipeau Centre campus weekly at the point where it enters the town's sewer system.

Joynt said staff measured two spikes in the output readings from the Galipeau Centre over the last year, but those measurements were within the range acceptable for other commercial water users, and — in any case — the abnormalities couldn't be definitively traced back to Aquagreen Dispositions.

"We consistently monitor for about the last year. [It's] nothing to be concerned about, nothing more than what happens at other industries," said Joynt, adding that the town would increase the frequency of sampling if there were concerns about abnormally poor discharge.

ted-joynt-smiths-falls-superindendent-utilities.jpg

Ted Joynt, the superintendent of utilities for Smiths Falls, says the town is closely monitoring sewage output from the company. (Stu Mills/CBC)

Joynt acknowledged the processing of a large number of bodies could be challenging for the water treatment plant.

"It could be a problem. We haven't experienced that yet. I don't know how many bodies they'd have to do in a day for that to be a problem," he said.

"The liquid mixes with all the other wastewater from the Galipeau Centre, so it tends to dilute it down quite a bit before it gets into our pipes."

Remaining bones dried, pressed into powder
The computerized Aquagreen Dispositions system takes less than two hours to dissolve most organic material.

Once the cycle is complete, the caustic fluid from the pressure vessel passes through two filters and on into the municipal sewer system, leaving only the skeleton behind.

Those bones, soft and wet from the alkaline hydrolysis process, are then dried in a convection oven, pressed into a fine white powder and finally returned to the loved one's family to be scattered.

The total weight of the powdered calcium phosphate matter that is returned, Hilton said, is between three and five kilograms.

"It's 100 per cent green," said Hilton, who has completed nearly 200 flame-free cremations since opening last year, with business growing each month.

'I think this is the way of the future, this green technology.'- Dale Hilton, owner of Aquagreen Dispositions
"I think this is the way of the future, this green technology," he said.

"Flame-based [cremation] is not environmentally friendly, but up until this point, that's the only thing we've had. Now, I think people are looking at it a different way."

About 280 litres of alkaline water solution are needed to dissolve an average-sized human body. The heated, pressurized vessel requires an amount of electricity equivalent to that used by a refrigerator, Hilton said.

Artificial hip joints, surgical plates, screws, heart stents and other pieces of surgical hardware inserted in the body over a person's lifetime are unharmed by the process. Hilton said there's a program to recycle that specialized medical hardware, donating it to hospitals in developing countries where costs are prohibitively high.

"You're entering yourself back to your natural state as you come into this world. You come in by water, and you leave by water," said Hilton. "It's green, all the way around."

Then to Rideau River? Dare not fishing in Smith Falls anymore!!!
 
现在流行的花草葬很环保的,归于尘土回归大自然。
 
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